From: pautrey on
http://articles.mercola.com/sites/articles/archive/2010/07/24/8-hospital-secrets-you-need-to-know.aspx



What Your Local Hospital is Hoping You Won't Discover
Posted By Dr. Mercola | July 24 2010 | 88,109 views





Mainstreet.com offers a few essential facts about hospitals that you
should know before you check in:

Stay Healthy in July

July is the most dangerous month to visit a hospital. That's the month
when students graduate from medical school and start doing residencies
at teaching hospitals. Deaths due to hospital medication errors spike
by 10 percent in July.

Hospital Wait Times

Hospitals have terrible wait times, which may actually be endangering
patients. Patients who need to be seen within 14 minutes of arriving
ended up having to wait more than twice as long.

The Rise of Bedsores

In recent years, the number of hospital patients suffering from
bedsores has increased significantly. In order to prevent them, ask
your doctor or whoever is accompanying you to make sure that you
change positions every couple hours, keep your skin clean and prop
yourself up with pillows to relieve the pressure.

Risk of Infections

There are 1.7 million cases of hospital infections every year, and
99,000 deaths that are related to these infections.

Medical Identity Theft

To date, 1.5 million Americans have had their personal information
stolen so that someone else can use your health care to cover their
costs. At the moment, hospitals are struggling to deal with this
problem.

Bills May Be Negotiable

Most Americans have been the victim of hospital bill shock at one
point or another, but it's important to remember that sometimes these
bills are negotiable. Some hospitals have been known to drop the price
by a third or more.

Hospitals Scan Your Credit Reports

Some hospitals have taken up the controversial practice of looking at
patient credit scores, credit card limits and even 401(k) information.
The issue has raised privacy concerns among consumer advocacy groups.

Get to Know Your Anesthesiologist

An inept anesthesiologist can cause serious harm to a patient,
including death in the worst case scenario. It's best that you
request to interview anesthesiologists before your procedure so that
you can feel confident you're getting the best care.
Sources:
Main Street June 10, 2010

CNN July 8, 2010

JGIM May 29, 2010 (PDF)

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Dr. Mercola's Comments:


One of the reasons I am so passionate about sharing information about
healthful eating, exercise, and stress management is because these
basic strategies can help keep you out of the hospital.

There are plenty of reasons – health related or otherwise -- for
wanting to avoid hospitals, and several valid ones are listed in the
Main Street article above, from having your identity stolen to getting
killed...

Over the past decade, health care settings have become increasingly
dangerous, mainly because hospitals are prime breeding grounds for
newer, deadly superbugs like MRSA and other serious infections. Other
reasons include understaffing and human mistakes.

The Frightening Statistics of Hospital Infection Rates
According to CDC statistics, approximately 1.7 million Americans
contract infections during hospital stays, and 99,000 deaths are
attributed to these infections each year! And that's just ONE cause of
death directly attributable to the medical system you entrust with
your health care needs.

Most of these hospital acquired infections could be avoided if
hospitals maintained stricter infection control measures; simple
strategies such as washing hands before touching each patient, and
making sure bedding is cleaned, for example, go a long way to ensure a
safer environment.

As I've mentioned many times before, the modern health care system as
a whole is the leading cause of death in the US. And well intentioned
but ill-informed US doctors are the third leading cause of death.
Their mistakes claim some 225,000 lives every year.

Knowing what we know about infection rates in hospitals, I strongly
recommend checking yours out. In the above article, Main Street
provides a helpful link to Consumer Reports' listing of infection
rates at major hospitals across the US.

You can review this list and see how the hospitals in your area fare
before you plan an elective surgery, for example.

Should you fall ill, either ask to be taken to another hospital, or
ask a friend or family member to stay with you to ensure proper
hygiene measures are employed.

Americans Pay TWICE as Much for Health Care, but Receive the WORST
Quality of Care
This was true in 2008, and over the past two years absolutely nothing
has changed.

American medical care is still the most expensive in the world. We
spend twice as much for health care, per person, than other
industrialized countries. And we're still in last place among seven
countries surveyed, when it comes to preventing avoidable deaths and
providing quality care.

The US also has a drastically different range of life expectancy
between people living in richer or poorer states. A 30- year gap now
exists in the average life expectancy between Mississippi, in the Deep
South, and Connecticut, in prosperous New England.

Sadly, the decline in life expectancy in these worst-off areas are
primarily caused by a rise in a number of preventable diseases, such
as lung cancer, chronic lung disease, and diabetes, highlighting the
dire need for proper health education and preventive measures.

The latest Commonwealth Fund report -- which used data from
"nationally representative patient and physician surveys in seven
countries in 2007, 2008, and 2009" -- again ranked the United States
dead last, compared to Britain, Canada, Germany, Netherlands,
Australia and New Zealand.

According to Reuters:

"The report looks at five measures of healthcare -- quality,
efficiency, access to care, equity and the ability to lead long,
healthy, productive lives.

Britain, whose nationalized healthcare system was widely derided by
opponents of U.S. healthcare reform, ranks first in quality while the
Netherlands ranked first overall on all scores, the Commonwealth team
found."

Ironically, researchers are also finding that Americans are
increasingly being over-treated to death. Treatments that buy only
weeks of time are frequently employed when patients are terminally
ill, or dying from old age. Meanwhile, medical bills are a leading
cause of family bankruptcies.

Again, most diseases and health conditions in the US are treated
incorrectly and inefficiently, at extremely high cost, and I believe a
major part of this problem is lack of prevention.

Focusing our efforts on educating about healthful lifestyle strategies
could make all the difference, along with reducing our knee-jerk
inclination to treat every symptom with toxic drugs.

BEWARE of July – The Most Dangerous Month for Any Hospital Stay
If you live near a teaching hospital, you'll want to pay attention to
these stats.

In the US, medical students graduate and begin their residences in
July each year, and as a result of inexperience combined with the
sleep deprivation, medication- and other medical errors in teaching
hospitals spike upward. Additionally many inexperienced interns and
residents join the staff.

Nationally, error rates go up by 10 percent in July in teaching
hospitals, a recent study shows, while non-teaching hospital error
rates stay more or less fixed.

I agree with Main Street's advice to investigate whether your local
hospital is a teaching hospital or not, and if you do get sick, either
request another hospital, or at least be prepared to ask more
questions to make sure you're getting appropriate care.

How to Survive in a Diseased Health Paradigm
In January of this year, Reuters reported that the U.S. spent $2.3
trillion dollars on health care in 2008. But although this was
slightly less than projected, showing the slowest rise in health care
costs in nearly 50 years, it's still dramatically disproportionate
compared to what other nations are capable of accomplishing with less
than half of what the US spends.

By 2017, health care spending is projected to exceed $4 trillion. This
is largely due to the reliance on a medical system that treats only
symptoms and never the cause of disease. The US also tends to over-
test and over-treat, and I think it's obvious by now that most
Americans are grossly over-medicated.

Still, every available index shows that this multitrillion dollar
investment is a miserable failure.

More drugs, more surgeries, and more medical tests do not equal better
health. All it does is bankrupt individuals, and the nation as a
whole.

Will anything change as the US health care reform takes effect?

I sincerely doubt it, because the attitude toward health care is not
being properly addressed. The reform is simply trying to figure out
how to keep paying these exorbitant prices.

Preventive measures are still largely ignored.

I still believe you can influence this negative trend, however, by
changing your own attitude toward health by realizing that some of the
best ways to improve your health are very inexpensive. Some are even
free.

Folks, you CAN Take Control of Your Health. You don't have to be just
another sad statistic.

There are a number of basic strategies you can use to avoid getting
sucked into the current disease-care paradigm. Following these
guidelines will be a powerful way to avoid premature aging, and
improve your health, no matter what your age, so you can avoid having
to take your chances in a hospital.

1.Eat a healthful diet that's right for your nutritional type (paying
very careful attention to keeping your insulin levels down)
2.Drink plenty of clean water
3.Manage your stress
4.Exercise properly
5.Enjoy some daily sunshine
6.Limit toxin exposure
7.Consume healthy fat
8.Eat plenty of raw food
9.Optimize insulin and leptin levels
10.Get plenty of sleep



Related Links:
Be VERY Careful Which Hospital You Choose

More Than 100,000 People Die EVERY Year in the U.S. Because of
Hospital Acquired Infections

Hospitals Can Make You Sicker 11/13/04


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